Minggu, 28 April 2013

Toxicity of poison from spider Nephila sp.


Toxicity of poison from spider Nephila sp. to Aëdes aegypti L. larvae

YAYAN SANJAYA♥, TINA SAFARIA
Program Studi Biologi FPMIPA, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia (UPI), Bandung 40154


ABSTRACT

A research about the toxicity of poison from spider Nephila sp. unto larvae of Aëdes aegypti L. had been done. The objectives of this research were to get the information about the toxicity of poison from spider Nephila sp. into larvae A. aegypti. The experiment method of this research was using Randomized Complete Block Design. This experiment used all of four instars of A. aegypti larvae. The experiment of each instar had been done with six treatments of the lethal concentration from spiders poison. Those six treatments were 1%, 10%, 25%, 50%, 75% and 100%. Each treatment had four replications. The result of this research showed that poison from spider Nephila sp. is toxic unto the larvae of A. aegypti. The average of lethal concentration for the first instar is 13.11%, for the second instar is 28.16%, for the third instar is 41.46% and for the fourth instar is 63.09%.

Key words: toxicity, lethal concentration (LC50), spider Nephila sp. and larvae of Aëdes aegypti L.

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A Fossil Wood of Dipterocarpaceae


A Fossil Wood of Dipterocarpaceae from Pliocene Deposit in the
West Region of Java Island, Indonesia

YANCE I. MANDANG1, NORIKO KAGEMORI
1 Forest Product Research and Development Center, Bogor 16610, Indonesia.
2 Wood Research Institute, Kyoto University, Uji, Kyoto 6110011, Japan.

ABSTRACT

Fossil woods in Java Island have been excavated and sold for outdoor ornaments or indoor decoration purposes since 30 years ago. These fossils are in danger of being drained out without known identities, composition and history. This study was aimed to find out the botanical identity and geographical aspect of a newly recovered silicified fossil wood from Banten area in the west region of Java Island. The fossil trunk 28 m in length and 105 cm in diameter was buried in a tuffaceous sandstone layer. The age of the stratum was thought to be Lower Pliocene. A small sample was cut from the outer part of the log and then ground to obtain thin section for anatomical observation. The main anatomical features of the fossil wood are as follows: wood diffuse porous; vessel almost exclusively solitary, vascicentric tracheid present; axial intercellular canal present, distributed in long tangential rows; fibers with distinctly bordered pit. These features show affinities of the fossil wood to the extant wood Dryobalanops of the family Dipterocarpaceae, regardless of the fact that this genus is no longer exists living in the natural forest of the present day Java Island.

Keywords: fossil wood, Dipterocarpaceae, Dryobalanoxylon, Pliocene, Java Island.

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